October 2011 - Incredible India

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Wednesday 19 October 2011

IAF MiG-29 crashes in Himachal, no sign of wreckage


An Indian Air Force (IAF) MiG-29 combat jet crashed in Himachal Pradesh'sLahaul Valley during a night flying exercise but the wreckage is yet to be located, officials said Wednesday. There was no immediate word on the fate of the pilot.
'Two IAF choppers were pressed into operation this (Wednesday) morning. After recceing the mountains for more than two hours, the choppers have returned back to their base,' Lahul Deputy Commissioner Rajeev Shankar told IANS over the phone.
A search was also conducted in the adjacent Chamba district but this too was unsuccessful.
'Since the peaks are lofty and the peaks are narrow, it's really challenging to locate the missing aircraft,' Chamba Additional District Magistrate Neeraj Kumar said.
Earlier, the Chamba district administration had sent a team of trekkers to the Bharmour area to locate the aircraft's wreckage. Another team was sent to the Kugti wildlife sanctuary but both returned empty handed.
Lahul Superintendent of Police Bimal Gupta said a communication that a MiG-29 had crashed somewhere in the Lahaul Valley was received from the IAF at around 8.30 p.m. Tuesday.
He said Chokhang village was zeroed in on as locals informed police that they noticed a fireball in the sky and heard a loud sound.
Chokhang village on the Keylong-Udaipur highway is about 40 km from the district headquarters of Keylong and 450 km from here.
The distance between Chokhang and Bharmour is a mere two kilometres.

Yeddyurappa back in jail, gets AC cell


Former Karnataka chief minister B.S. Yeddyurappa, arrested Saturday incorruption cases, Wednesday began his first day in an airconditioned 24X15 feet cell of the central prison here, after spending three days in two hospitals.
The 68-year-old Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader was taken back to the prison in the eastern suburb of Parappana Agrahara from Victoria Hospital in the central business district - this time without the drama that had unfolded when he got admitted to two hospitals in three days.
'After a check-up at the jail hospital, he was lodged in the cell,' jail authorities told reporters.
The cell has an attached bathroom as Yeddyurappa enjoys 'Y' category security.
Yeddyurappa was on Saturday sent to judicial custody till Oct 22 by special Lokayukta court judgeN.K. Sudhindra Rao in two of five cases of corruption and illegal land deals filed by two Bangalore advocates in January this year.
He did not stay in the jail for long and was shifted to Jayadeva Institute of Cardiovascular Science and Research early Sunday after he complained of chest pain.
He was taken to Victoria Hospital Tuesday evening as tests at the Jayadeva Institute showed he suffered no heart ailment. He got admitted to Victoria on the ground that he suffered from diabetics, high blood pressure and backache.
His supporters and police Wednesday did not try to block video cameramen and photographers from the media from capturing the moment.
On both days they had used a bedspread to shut the view of the arrested former chief minister being wheeled in to hospital.
Yeddyurappa's bail plea will be heard by the high court Thursday.
The case against Yeddyurappa, filed by advocates, Sirajin Bhasha and N.K. Balaraj, is that he, his two sons - BJP Lok Sabha member B.Y. Raghavendra and B.Y. Vijayendra, son-in-law R. Sohan Kumar, - conspired to denotify government land in return for monetary gains.
Former state Muzrai (endowments) minister S.N. Krishnaiah Shetty, BJP legislator Hemachanda Sagar and several others are also accused in the cases.
The judge has given conditional bail to all the accused, except Yeddyurappa and Shetty, who too has moved the high court for bail.
Shetty's bail plea will also be heard Thursday.

Indian F1 track can be among top five: Karthikeyan



 One could clearly see the excitement in the eyes of Neel Jani after he drove at the Buddh International Circuit for the first time, on Tuesday.

Motorola launches world's 'thinnest' smartphone

Motorola has launched what it called an 'impossibly thin' Droid RAZR phone with a stainless-steel core, a Gorilla Glass screen and a nanotechnology Splash-guard that protects even the electrical boards inside.
Motorola Mobility's Indian-American president Sanjay Jha declared the 7.1mm-thick mobile device the world's thinnest smartphone. Not only is it thinner than other 3G phones, it will run on Verizon Wireless's 4G LTE network in the US.
In other countries, the phone will be called the Motorola RAZR. The details on international carriers and network compatibility will come soon.
With a 4.3-inch screen with qHD resolution, it will have higher contrast and richer color than iPhone 4S, said Jha.
Not only will it have an incredibly high-res screen and a powerful 1.2GHz dual-core processor, but it will be the 'first device to download HD movies from Netflix'.
On the software front, it runs Android 2.3.5, aka Gingerbread. It will not launch with Ice Cream Sandwich, the next version of the Android OS.
The Droid RAZR supports the webtop interface, like the Droid Bionic, Atrix, Photon and others, so one can dock it to one of Motorola's lapdocks, in order to run full Firefox browser.
The RAZR also has MotoCast, a syncing system that Jha called the phone's most important feature.
'You can stream content from your computer straight to your pocket (or purse) so your personal content is always within reach,' according to a Motorola press release.

India leapfrogs England into fourth position in ICC ODI rankings


World champion India has moved ahead of England to fourth position in ICC ODI rankings after taking a 2-0 lead in the ongoing five match series. gland had started the series in fourth position on 113 ratings points but has now slipped to 110 ratings points whereas India has jumped from 112 to 115 ratings points.
However, England can still finish in the pre-series fourth position, provided it wins the remaining three matches in the series.

If it clinches a 5-0 series win and South Africa loses its opening two matches againstAustralia, India will even rise to third place in the table, just one rating point behind second-placed Sri Lanka.
In contrast, India just needs to win one more match to not only secure the series but also the number-four position.
South Africa has an opportunity to draw level with Australia in the Reliance ICC ODI Championship table when the two sides go head to head in a three-ODI series which starts at Centurion from Wednesday.
South Africa currently sits in third position on 116 ratings points while Australia is 14 ratings points ahead in top position. However, things will change if the Proteas wins all the three matches of the series.
If South Africa wins the series 3-0, it will join Australia on 124 ratings points but will be placed below by a fraction of a point. However, if the series result is reversed, then Michael Clarke's side will rise to 133 ratings points while Hashim Amla's side will drop to 111 ratings points after conceding five ratings points.

Tuesday 18 October 2011

Cracking IIT as monkey business


The answer to whether the standard of IIT students is regressing can be found if you all are prepared to travel 25,000 years in the past. This was the period when we — the Homo Sapiens lost our nearest competitor – the Neanderthals.
Arguably, one of the key attributes which distinguished us from Neanderthals is intelligence.
But what is intelligence? Most evolutionary biologists agree that it was our cognitive superiority — our ability to question and accomplish complex tasks, our desire to create and our willingness to travel to undiscovered frontiers which led to our survival.
As things stand, humans are the only species to have derived the speed of light, mapped genome and sent fellow beings to the moon. And as Stephen Hawking indicates, colonising the space — our and other species’ only hope to continue to survive — is only possible if humans continue to evolve on the path of intelligence.
When India decided to build IITs as ‘ institutions of national importance’, I am assuming it thought of a place where the most intelligent of its citizens enter and most intelligent of its scientists and engineers emerge. But how does India measure that it is sending the most intelligent to the IITs? Or to put it in the words of Gould ( 1981), does it measure our men justly? Ironically, the gatekeepers of IITs have failed to keep pace with the advancement in our understanding of intelligence.
The IIT- JEE which selects 10,000 odd out of the 5, 00,000 interested — seems stuck in the early 20th century when concepts like multiple intelligence ( Gardner, 1983) were absent and the over- reliance on psychometric tests to measure intelligence was rife.
Today we understand intelligence to comprise emotional and social intelligence, abstract thinking, creativity and all those attributes which prevented our extinction.
Incidentally, in the purely objective type JEE there is no mechanism to measure multi- dimensional intelligence. This can probably explain why people such as Dr Ramakrishnan, the 2009 Nobel Laureate failed to clear it. One can clear the JEE without ever listening to Mozart, reading Kafka or exploring the connection between Fibonacci and Pingla.
The opportunity to do all this at secondary school is also snatched away by the time one spends to clear the IIT entrance.
The JEE’s unidimensional nature has given birth to a peculiar beast — IIT coaching centres. A beast which can achieve the unimaginable feat of turning humans back to apes! This is the beast which promotes rote learning as supposed to critical thinking. It works to prevent you from travelling to unknown territories or asking novel questions. The beast doesn’t appreciate the importance of carving novel paths.
Hence, it never encountered a Steve Jobs. It provides set formulas and trivialises complexity.
It is similar to the training of chimpanzees such as Sheba and Kanzi — who through years of training were able to perform complex tasks. But in reality these were simple tricks which were taught through repetitive learning. This can also explain why more students score higher than their predecessors in the JEE without any difference in intelligence — the Flynn effect.
Beware, as this beast has extended its arms to engulf even 10 year- olds who are now given this regressive mantra — question you perish and ape you thrive — something that has been beautifully highlighted in French playright Lonesco’s T he Lesson . I can elaborate on the play’s theme but following the spirit of this article will make you venture into the unknown.

15 countries with biggest oil reserves


1. Saudi Arabia
Proven oil reserves: 259.9 billion barrels
Proportion of world total: 19.20 per cent
Total oil production: 9.76 million barrels
Consumption: 2.43 million barrels


2. Canada
Proven oil reserves: 175.2 billion barrels
Proportion of world total: 12.94 per cent
Total oil production: 3.29 million barrels
Consumption: 2.15 million barrels


3. Iran
Proven oil reserves: 137.6 billion barrels
Proportion of world total: 10.16 per cent
Total oil production: 4.18 million barrels
Consumption: 1.69 million barrels

4. Iraq
Proven oil reserves: 115 billion barrels
Proportion of world total: 8.5 per cent
Total oil production: 2.4 million barrels
Consumption: 636,000 barrels

5. Kuwait
Proven oil reserves: 101.5 billion barrels
Proportion of world total: 7.5 per cent
Total oil production: 2.5 million barrels
Consumption: 372,000 barrels

6. Venezuela
Proven oil reserves: 99.4 billion barrels
Proportion of world total: 7.34 per cent
Total oil production: 2.47 million barrels
Consumption: 723,000 barrels

7. The United Arab Emirates
Proven oil reserves: 97.8 billion barrels
Proportion of world total: 7.22 per cent
Total oil production: 2.79 million barrels
Consumption: 492,000 barrels

8. Russia
Proven oil reserves: 60 billion barrels
Proportion of world total: 4.43 per cent
Total oil production: 9.93 million barrels
Consumption: 2.74 million barrels

9. Libya
Proven oil reserves: 44.3 billion barrels
Proportion of world total: 3.27 per cent
Total oil production: 1.79 million barrels
Consumption: 264,000 barrels

10. Nigeria
Proven oil reserves: 37.2 billion barrels
Proportion of world total: 2.75 per cent
Total oil production: 2.21 million barrels
Consumption: 272,000 barrels

11. Kazakhstan
Proven oil reserves: 30 billion barrels
Proportion of world total: 2.22 per cent
Total oil production: 1.54 million barrels
Consumption: 241,000 barrels

12. Qatar
Proven oil reserves: 25.4 billion barrels
Proportion of world total: 1.88 per cent
Total oil production: 1.21 million barrels
Consumption: 147,000 barrels

13. China
Proven oil reserves: 20.4 billion barrels
Proportion of world total: 1.51 per cent
Total oil production: 3.99 million barrels
Consumption: 8.32 million barrels

14. United States
Proven oil reserves: 19.2 billion barrels
Proportion of world total: 1.42 per cent
Total oil production: 9.14 million barrels
Consumption: 18.81 million barrels

15. Brazil
Proven oil reserves: 11.65 billion barrels
Proportion of world total: 0.95 per cent
Total oil production: 2.57 million barrels
Consumption: 2.52 million barrels

Monday 17 October 2011

Bowlers, Kohli secure emphatic India victory




A series of double-strikes at vital junctures in England's innings helped India limit the visitors to a below-par total in good batting conditions at the Feroz Shah Kotla and secure a 2-0 lead in the five-ODI series. The first occurred at the beginning of the innings, the second at the halfway stage and the third at the start of the slog. They forced England to revert to a watchful approach, when they had been well placed to surge, leaving India's batsmen with a modest chase on a fast outfield with small boundaries.

Rule of law has prevailed: Sanjiv Bhatt


Ahmedabad, Oct 17 (IANSSuspended Gujarat police officer Sanjiv Bhatt Monday was greeted byloud cheers as he walked out of the Sabarmati jail here on being granted bail after spending 18 days inside.
'I am happy that the rule of law has prevailed and this would be a victory for hope,' a composed Bhatt told reporters outside the jail.
Rose petals were showered on him and his supporters shouted slogans in his support as he left the jail.
A court here Monday granted bail to Bhatt, who has accused Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi of complicity in the 2002 communal riots.
He was arrested Sep 30 for allegedly forcing a police constable, K.D. Panth, to sign a false affidavit about his attending a meeting called by Modi soon after the Godhra train burning that sparked the riots.

India Inc cautious on new hiring: Survey


India Inc is cautious on new hirings due to economic uncertainties as only half of the people terminated or who resigned in 2010 found new jobs in the second quarter of 2011-12, a survey has revealed.
Almost 51 percent of employees who were terminated or resigned from their jobs in 2010 reported they found new opportunities in the second quarter of the current fiscal, according to a survey by MyHiringClub.com, a hiring vendor consolidator.
'The global economic slump led by the United States and parts of Europe is likely to take a toll on the Indian industries insofar as hiring is concerned,' Rajesh Kumar, CEO of MyHiringClub.com said in the report.
However, he said the situation would not be as bad as it was in 2008-09 during the global economic crisis.
More than 13,960 employees who were terminated or resigned in 2010 participated in the study, which was conducted online by MyHiringClub.com from Oct 1-7.
Kumar said among respondents 81 percent employees who were terminated or resigned in the last year found full-time positions while 14 percent started their own venture and five percent found part-time work.
On remuneration, the survey revealed 59 percent people took jobs with equal or less pay, while 41 percent found a job with more pay than their previous position.
Some 61 percent employees who were terminated or resigned and found new jobs have relocated to a new place, the survey said.
People in the age group of 25-34 years have the highest incidence of getting new job opportunities at 57 percent, while only 12 percent of the people above 52 years of age found jobs.

Sunday 16 October 2011

BlackBerry outage could accelerate shift to iPhone



REUTERS - John Stuart has been chained to his BlackBerry for years, first as a systems manager forWall Street bank Morgan Stanley and then as chief information officer for Beverly Hills Wealth Management.
But this week, Stuart ordered an iPhone from Apple Inc, ending his 7-year relationship with BlackBerry maker Research in Motion.

This could be the mother of all scams in India



Indians seem to have taken a fancy to scams the same way that Somalians have to piracy. Almost every other breaking news on TV channels talks about some money making racket or the other. The latest scam to be unearthed may however be bigger than all the previous scams put together. And its ramifications may be even more lethal.
Under the double-tax treaty signed with the Swiss government, the Swiss will now have to provide details to the Indian government on transactions involving Indians. It's thus no big surprise that black money is quickly exiting the Swiss Alps. But then where are these illegal piles of cash going? Well, it may be coming right back to India and sitting peacefully in our own backyard. And the amount involved could be as hefty as US$ 40-45 bn. But, this is just the figure for one year, 2010-11. The actual amount of black money entering the country could be a lot more.
Do you ever look at the latest export numbers, FII data, etc. and believe that these numbers are works of fiction or a figment of someone's imagination? Well, the latest black money scam may be just that. According to three analysts from Kotak Securites, who have been studying various data points, the numbers just don't add up. Here are a couple of examples:
Official export data shows a 79% year-on-year (YoY) growth in engineering exports in 2010-11. However, exports by engineering companies in the BSE 500 index show just a 11% growth. In dollars terms, the difference is even starker. There appears to be a US$ 28 bn shortfall in exports. Now, the probability that this amount has come in through over-invoicing or fictitious exports is higher than that it came from tiny engineering companies which are not part of the BSE 500 index.
Copper exports have also quadrupled from Rs 85 bn to Rs 367 bn. But, how is this possible in India, a country which does not as a practice export this mineral. China apparently bought the whole lot. So is the dragon nation also part of this public hoodwinking?
Also, in 2010-11 foreign investor flows added up to US$ 22 bn, according to official data. The Kotak analysts did a cross-check with international sources like exchange-traded funds and EPFR Global. Their analysis shows that not more than US$ 4.5 bn came in to India. So, where did the other US$ 17.5 come from?
Well, India really needs to clean up its act. Else even the legitimate flows of capital into the country may dry up. Greater disclosures, a strong clampdown on corruption and a complete shakedown of government frauds need to take place. Anna Hazare's movement and his 12-day fast should not go in vain. And neither should India's reputation as an investment destination.

Friday 14 October 2011

Dhoni and Jadeja crush England




MS Dhoni marked India's homecoming with a brutal innings of 87 not out from 70 balls, before the left-arm spin of Ravindra Jadeja sparked a dramatic English batting collapse, as the team that failed to win a single international fixture on their recent tour of England returned to form with a crushing 126-run victory at Hyderabad.
Dhoni's performance was his fourth half-century in as many international innings, but whereas the last three had been insufficient to force victory, this performance was more reminiscent of his last performance in a home international - his crushing 91 not out in the World Cup final against Sri Lanka in April.
After winning his first toss in six attempts against England, Dhoni chose to bat first on a slow surface, but India were struggling on 139 for 4 after 34 overs before he and Suresh Raina turned on the after-burners as a further 161 were added in the final third of the innings. As had regularly been the case in England, he started cautiously against a disciplined attack, and had reached 5 from 18 balls before belting his first boundary, from Ravi Bopara, to signal India's late charge.
In total, Dhoni belted 10 fours and one six in his innings, the latter coming from a trademark helicopter flick off Steven Finn in the penultimate over of the innings. Finn had started his day's work with impressive pace and accuracy, and should have had a first-over wicket when Jonathan Trott dropped a sitter off Ajinkya Rahane at second slip - a moment that only the 26,000 crowd were able to witness, thanks to a TV rights dispute that caused a three-over blackout. But Finn finished with the bruised figures of 1 for 67 in nine overs, with his solitary wicket that of Raina in his seventh over, moments after he had been battered for another six over long-on.
Raina, whose brutality against the full length ball was a sight to behold, crunched 61 from 55 balls, with both of his sixes coming from the final four balls of his innings. Like Dhoni, he had opted for circumspection in the early part of his stay, but the longer his 62-run stand for the fifth wicket continued, the more boisterous the Hyderabad crowd became.
It had been a more muted affair in the early part of India's innings. Parthiv Patel was run out at the non-striker's end for 9 as Finn fingertipped a Rahane drive onto the stumps, while Rahane himself had reached 15 from 41 balls when Graeme Swann dragged him out of his crease with his third delivery of the match to give Craig Kieswetter an easy stumping.
In his first match since recovering from concussion, Gautam Gambhir confirmed his fitness with a fluent 32 from 33 balls. However, Jade Dernbach's liquorice allsorts proved hard to pick and tough to get away on the surface, and the slower ball that did for Gambhir was a beauty. It looped up above the batsman's eyeline and dropped sharply to rap his shin in front of leg stump.
At 79 for 3 after 18 overs, the game was very much in the balance. However, England's position could, and probably should, have been even better after 25 overs, when Samit Patel repeated Finn's trick of dropping his fingertips on a straight drive. It was Raina this time who was in peril as the bails were dislodged, but after a lengthy delay for the TV adjudication, he was given the benefit of the doubt by the third umpire, Sudhir Ashani.
In the final analysis, however, it really didn't matter. Though Alastair Cook continued his impressive form as England captain with 60 from 63 balls, his dismissal in the 23rd over of the innings precipated a dramatic collapse at the hands of Jadeja and R Ashwin. England tumbled from 111 for 2 to 134 for 7 in the space of 40 balls, and only Samit Patel (16) and the No. 10, Finn, with a run a ball 18, provided any resistance.
Praveen Kumar, India's star bowler from their ill-fated tour of England, had launched India's defence in fine style, opening up with a maiden to Cook, and he had not conceded a run when he extracted Kieswetter with his eighth delivery, a full-length ball that jagged off the seam to take a thin edge through to Dhoni.
The loss of their top-order powerhitter caused England to rejig their conventional batting order, with Kevin Pietersen emerging at No. 3 ahead of the more staid Trott. The plan looked to be paying off as Pietersen launched his innings with ominous resolve, but having struck three fours in a 28-ball 19, he attempted a quick single to mid-on where Ashwin nailed him with a direct hit.
Trott then appeared at No. 4, and for 13.3 overs he and Cook steadied the innings, adding 71 for the third wicket to give England a solid platform. But then, having brought up his fifty at exactly a run a ball, Cook gave his innings away with a loose clip to deep midwicket off Ravindra Jadeja, and thwacked his pad with his bat in frustration as he left the crease.
Worse was to follow for England two overs later. Trott, whose 26 from 42 balls had been a typically measured performance, attempted an ungainly smear across the line against Jadeja and lost his leg stump, and eight balls later, Ravi Bopara drove loosely at Ashwin and chipped a simple return catch to the keeper.
Jadeja by now was on a roll with the crowd fully behind him, and he extended England's collapse to four wickets in 26 balls when Jonny Bairstow, the hero of the run-chase in Cardiff, last month, also offered up a return catch. His figures after four overs were 3 for 17, and England's unbeaten run against India in 2011 was soon all over.
InningsDot balls4s6sPP1PP2PP3Last 10 oversNB/Wides
India14422547/120/159/191/21/18
England11516148/229/026/2n/a0/3


India 300/7 (50 ov)
England 174 (36.1 ov)
India won by 126 runs
India innings (50 overs maximum)RMB4s6sSR
View dismissalPA Patelrun out (Finn)920101090.00
View dismissalAM Rahanest †Kieswetter b Swann1559410036.58
View dismissalG Gambhirlbw b Dernbach3257334096.96
View dismissalV Kohlic Pietersen b Patel3770630058.73
View dismissalSK Rainac Bairstow b Finn61915552110.90
MS Dhoni*†not out8710470101124.28
View dismissalRA Jadejarun out (Bresnan)27322212122.72
View dismissalR Ashwinrun out (Finn)811610133.33
P Kumarnot out19100100.00
Extras(lb 4, w 18, nb 1)23
Total(7 wickets; 50 overs; 235 mins)300(6.00 runs per over)
Did not bat R Vinay KumarU Yadav
Fall of wickets1-17 (Patel, 3.5 ov)2-52 (Rahane, 11.4 ov)3-79 (Gambhir, 17.5 ov)4-123 (Kohli, 28.5 ov),5-195 (Raina, 38.5 ov)6-260 (Jadeja, 45.6 ov)7-282 (Ashwin, 48.2 ov)
BowlingOMRWEcon
TT Bresnan1006606.60(4w)
View wicketST Finn906717.44(1nb, 2w)
View wicketJW Dernbach1005815.80(6w)
View wicketGP Swann1013513.50
View wicketSR Patel804916.12
RS Bopara302107.00
England innings (target: 301 runs from 50 overs)RMB4s6sSR
View dismissalAN Cook*c Vinay Kumar b Jadeja60107637095.23
View dismissalC Kieswetterc †Dhoni b Kumar71381087.50
View dismissalKP Pietersenrun out (Ashwin)1934293065.51
View dismissalIJL Trottb Jadeja2665420061.90
View dismissalRS Boparac & b Ashwin811100080.00
View dismissalJM Bairstowc & b Jadeja3870042.85
View dismissalSR Patelb Yadav1630182088.88
View dismissalTT Bresnanst †Dhoni b Ashwin4781050.00
View dismissalGP Swannb Yadav8891088.88
ST Finnnot out18191811100.00
View dismissalJW Dernbachb Ashwin2950040.00
Extras(w 3)3
Total(all out; 36.1 overs; 160 mins)174(4.81 runs per over)
Fall of wickets1-7 (Kieswetter, 2.2 ov)2-40 (Pietersen, 9.1 ov)3-111 (Cook, 22.4 ov)4-120 (Trott, 24.4 ov),5-124 (Bopara, 25.6 ov)
6-126 (Bairstow, 26.5 ov)7-134 (Bresnan, 29.2 ov)8-148 (Swann, 31.4 ov)9-163 (Patel, 33.5 ov),
10-174 (Dernbach, 36.1 ov)

BowlingOMRWEcon
View wicketP Kumar813814.75(1w)
R Vinay Kumar502404.80
V Kohli301103.66
View wicketsU Yadav503226.40(1w)
View wicketsR Ashwin8.103534.28(1w)
View wicketsRA Jadeja703434.85